
(CNN)U.S.
military commanders have proposed a program to provide arms and
ammunition to a coalition of up to 5,000 anti-ISIS Syrian rebels now
operating in northern Syria.
The group, which is loosely referred to as the Syrian Arab Coalition, has had battlefield successes in recent weeks against ISIS
at the very time the U.S. has been struggling to figure out what to do
with its own program to train other moderate Syrian rebels and to put
them on the battlefield.
U.S.
commanders now feel that supporting this coalition will be crucial to
success in northern Syria, according to a U.S. official who is not
authorized to speak publicly about ongoing military operations.
The
coalition is suffering from a critical shortage of ammunition. U.S.
commanders would like to resupply it as soon as possible, the official
said. However, a decision to provide ammunition and possibly additional
arms requires final approval from the White House, which the official
said has not happened yet.
The
coalition was for the first time publicly described as the "Syrian Arab
Coalition" by a senior Pentagon official discussing the current U.S.
train-and-equip mission for the Syrian opposition during testimony on
Capitol Hill.
"The
forces that we are training" are right now "small in number and clearly
are not going to reach the numbers that we had planned for," Christine
Wormuth, undersecretary for policy at the Defense Department, told the
Senate Armed Services Committee of the train-and-equip program, which
has only a handful of deployed fighters.
But
she added that they "are nevertheless getting terrific training and
very good equipment and, as such, will be able to really be force
multipliers of those other groups on the ground that have been very
effective, like the Syrian Arab Coalition."
It
is not yet clear, however, if the U.S.-trained rebels would be
politically acceptable to members of the Syrian Arab Coalition, which is
made up of 15 different tribes and ethnic groups, and whether the
U.S.-trained rebels would work with them directly.
There
are also questions about whether the Syrian Arab Coalition would be
willing to work with Kurdish YPG forces that have had their own
battlefield successes against ISIS in northern Syria
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